Figure 13: The Mediterranean sea
water as it enters the Atlantic over the Gibraltar sill with its own warm,
saline, and less dense characteristics, because of the barrier that
distinguishes between them. Temperatures are in degrees Celsius
(C°). (Marine Geology, Kuenen, p. 43, with a slight enhancement.)
(Click on the image to enlarge it.)
The Holy Quran mentioned that there is a barrier between two seas that meet and that they do not transgress. God has said:
He has set free the two seas meeting together. There is a barrier between them. They do not transgress. (Quran, 55:19-20)
But when the Quran speaks about the divider between fresh and salt water, it mentions the existence of “a forbidding partition” with the barrier. God has said in the Quran:
He is the one who has set free the two kinds of water, one sweet and palatable, and the other salty and bitter. And He has made between them a barrier and a forbidding partition. (Quran, 25:53)
One may ask, why did the Quran mention the partition when speaking about the divider between fresh and salt water, but did not mention it when speaking about the divider between the two seas?
Modern science has discovered that in estuaries, where fresh (sweet) and salt water meet, the situation is somewhat different from what is found in places where two seas meet. It has been discovered that what distinguishes fresh water from salt water in estuaries is a “pycnocline zone with a marked density discontinuity separating the two layers.” This partition (zone of separation) has a different salinity from the fresh water and from the salt water (see figure 14).
Figure 14: Longitudinal section
showing salinity (parts per thousand ‰) in an estuary. We can see
here the partition (zone of separation) between the fresh and the salt
water. (Introductory Oceanography, Thurman, p. 301, with a slight
enhancement.) (Click on the image to enlarge it.)
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